Cortical and trabecular bone adaptation to incremental load magnitudes using the mouse tibial axial compression loading model

AM Weatherholt, RK Fuchs, SJ Warden - Bone, 2013 - Elsevier
Bone, 2013Elsevier
The mouse tibial axial compression loading model has recently been described to allow
simultaneous exploration of cortical and trabecular bone adaptation within the same loaded
element. However, the model frequently induces cortical woven bone formation and has
produced inconsistent results with regards to trabecular bone adaptation. The aim of this
study was to investigate bone adaptation to incremental load magnitudes using the mouse
tibial axial compression loading model, with the ultimate goal of revealing a load that …
The mouse tibial axial compression loading model has recently been described to allow simultaneous exploration of cortical and trabecular bone adaptation within the same loaded element. However, the model frequently induces cortical woven bone formation and has produced inconsistent results with regards to trabecular bone adaptation. The aim of this study was to investigate bone adaptation to incremental load magnitudes using the mouse tibial axial compression loading model, with the ultimate goal of revealing a load that simultaneously induced lamellar cortical and trabecular bone adaptation. Adult (16weeks old) female C57BL/6 mice were randomly divided into three load magnitude groups (5, 7 and 9N), and had their right tibia axially loaded using a continuous 2-Hz haversine waveform for 360cycles/day, 3days/week for 4 consecutive weeks. In vivo peripheral quantitative computed tomography was used to longitudinally assess midshaft tibia cortical bone adaptation, while ex vivo micro-computed tomography and histomorphometry were used to assess both midshaft tibia cortical and proximal tibia trabecular bone adaptation. A dose response to loading magnitude was observed within cortical bone, with increasing load magnitude inducing increasing levels of lamellar cortical bone adaptation within the upper two thirds of the tibial diaphysis. Greatest cortical bone adaptation was observed at the midshaft where there was a 42% increase in estimated mechanical properties (polar moment of inertia) in the highest (9N) load group. A dose response to load magnitude was not clearly evident within trabecular bone, with only the highest load (9N) being able to induce measureable adaptation (31% increase in trabecular bone volume fraction at the proximal tibia). The ultimate finding was that a load of 9N (engendering a tensile strain of 1833 με on medial surface of the midshaft tibia) was able to simultaneously induce measurable lamellar cortical and trabecular bone adaptation when using the mouse tibial axial compression loading model in 16week old female C57BL/6 mice. This finding will help plan future studies aimed at exploring simultaneous lamellar cortical and trabecular bone adaptation within the same loaded element.
Elsevier